Dear Colleagues

 

I’m giving a 20-minute paper next Friday (27 Nov) at an ESF Humanities conference in Budapest. The conference title is Changing publication cultures in the humanities, and it has the following four sections:

 

1.     The new horizon of electronic publications

2.     Monographs as an endangered species in the humanities

3.     Publications and the problems of ‘lesser used’ languages

4.     The changing rationale of editing in electronic publications.

 

My paper is in the section on ‘Monographs as an endangered species in the humanities’ and its title is ‘Academic publishing at academic institutions: new solutions to an old problem’. (If anyone wants to see the programme for info, let me know and I can attach it but I know the discussion lists don’t accept attachments.)

 

I’d be very grateful for any points you’d like to raise about the situation in our fields at the moment. I am speaking both as an academic – who has always taken time to place my monographs, even though I’ve been in this game quite a while now – and as someone running a new publication project, see below. The main areas I intend to touch on are:

 

a.     The increasing difficulty in placing monographs, especially in MFL and especially interdisciplinary in field & approach, with commercial publishers;

b.     The contradiction between RAE/REF expectation of monographs in the humanities, yet less and less opportunity of publication;

c.     In relation to MFL in particular, the difficulty in keeping quotations in the original language, at least with commercial presses;

d.     The current rise in publication based in academic units (I don’t mean university presses, but series such as my own Institute’s igrs books, the series of our sister institute ISA, or similar specialist ‘NGO’ series such as Bithell, MHRA, Legenda, Tamesis, Boydell & Brewer [the latter pairs overlapping somewhat] – please let me know of others); these sometimes do allow original-language quotation, often with English translation;

e.     Their use – this is certainly true of igrs books, ISA and MHRA – of print-on-demand, which cuts thru the commercial publishers’ issue about small print-runs.

f.      However, I must admit that igrs books has not yet sent its first titles in to the printer, so there is still much to learn; the system is: the pdf text is lodged with the printer, marketing is in the hands of the publisher (ie the ‘NGO’), but distribution is through Amazon or similar.

g.     A few practical issues:

o    Camera-ready copy and who takes responsibility for it – we are finding with our series that it can be a problem leaving it in the hands of authors, careful as they generally are – Peter Lang has recently taken back responsibility for CRC, but other presses (especially on the continent eg Rodopi and, I believe, l’Harmattan) still leave it to the author;

o    Subsidies, & lack of HEIs’/funding bodies’ support for them (Susan Harrow has recently sent out a query on this, and I have her replies);

o    Similarly, lack of external funding for illustrations and/or CRC;

o    NB re funding: I recall in 2000 getting British Academy grants for illustration costs on one book and CRC on another – both these options no longer exist, I believe, in either BA or AHRC, our main funders.

 

I’d be really grateful for any points – amplifications, corrections, general thoughts – that you can give me on any of the above, and I will of course credit whatever I use in my talk. (I am intending to write the paper next Tuesday the latest.)

 

Many thanks!

Naomi

 

 

Prof Naomi Segal

Director, Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies

School of Advanced Study

University of London

Senate House, Malet St., London WC1E 7HU

 

tel: 020 7862 8739

fax: 020 7862 8762

sec: 020 7862 8677

website: http://igrs.sas.ac.uk

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